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LANDMARK DESIGNATION REPORT 




Milwaukee Avenue District 

Predominantly the 1200- through 1600-blocks of North 
Milwaukee Avenue, the 1500-block of North Damen 
Avenue, and the 1900- through 2000-blocks of West North 
Avenue. 

Preliminary Landmark Recommendation approved by the Commission 
on Chicago Landmarks, May 3, 2007 




CITY OF CHICAGO 
Richard M. Daley, Mayor 

Department of Planning and Development 
Arnold L. Randall, Commissioner 



The Commission on Chicago Landmarks, whose nine members are appointed by the Mayor and 
City Council, was established in 1968 by city ordinance. The Commission is responsible for recommend- 
ing to the City Council which individual buildings, sites, objects, or districts should be designated as 
Chicago Landmarks, which protects them by law. 

The landmark designation process begins with a staff study and a preliminary summary of 
information related to the potential designation criteria. The next step is a preliminary vote by the 
landmarks commission as to whether the proposed landmark is worthy of consideration. This vote not 
only initiates the formal designation process, but it places the review of city permits for the property under 
the jurisdiction of the Commission until a final landmark recommendation is acted on by the City Council. 

This Landmark Designation Report is subject to possible revision and amendment during the 
designation process. Only language contained within the designation ordinance adopted by the City 
Council should be regarded as final. 



Milwaukee Avenue District 

Predominantly the 1200- through 1600-blocks of North Milwaukee 
Avenue, the 1500-block of North D amen Avenue, and the 1900- through 
2000-blocks of West North Avenue. 

Period of Significance: circa 1877 - 1929 

Wicker Park's Milwaukee Avenue District, located in the West Town community area, is one of 
the finest historic commercial streets in Chicago. The district (map on page 2, building catalog 
begins on page 38), which began as an early trade route and matured into a commercial street, 
has played an important role in Chicago's economic development. Waves of immigration and 
shifting ethnic populations in the Milwaukee Avenue District convey important themes of the 
city's social history. Milwaukee Avenue functioned as "a city within the city," a vibrant and self- 
contained commercial district situated three miles from downtown Chicago. 

The Milwaukee Avenue District retains a solid and exceptional group of historic neighborhood 
commercial buildings, with a broad range of architectural styles from the late-nineteenth through 
the early-twentieth centuries. As the district developed, larger and more diverse building types 
appeared, including banks, office buildings, and entertainment venues. The resulting rich mix of 
building types and styles gives the district a visually distinct and urban character within the 
neighborhood context of Chicago's Northwest Side. 




The Milwaukee Avenue District is located in the Wicker Park neighborhood on the near 
Northwest Side of Chicago. 



District History and Development 

The diagonal streets fanning out from downtown Chicago, including Milwaukee Avenue, have 
attracted commercial uses and developed distinctive streetscapes with their three-way 
intersections and six-point corners. Like other diagonal streets, the route which Milwaukee 
Avenue follows was first established as a trail by Native Americans. Early Chicago historian A. 
T. Andreas described it as "an old Indian trail northwest from Chicago" which became an 
important passage between Chicago and early settlements in the townships northwest of the city 
in the 1 830s. The "crooked wagon track leading from Kinzie Street" passed through Jefferson 
Township, the western part of Niles, and on to Northfield. As the only route between Chicago 
and settlements northwest of the city, the trail was highly used; and as early as 1 858, the 
Chicago Tribune described it as "constantly filled with vehicles of every type and description." 
Like many early roads in Chicago, it was poorly drained and impassable in wet weather. 

In 1 848 Silas W. Sherman, an early settler of Northfield, successfully petitioned the State of 
Illinois to improve the condition of the trail. The State surveyed and established the route as the 
Northwest Plank Road and chartered an association of investors who were permitted to charge 
tolls in exchange for grading and planking the road from Chicago to Wheeling. The plank road 
became an important route for the transport of fresh produce into Chicago from rural areas 
northwest of the city. 

Despite the importance of the plank road, the area which would become the Milwaukee Avenue 
District was undeveloped up to the 1 860s. The transformation of this rural trade route into a 
thriving commercial district occurred in the late nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. The 
development process may be considered in two phases. The first phase began after the Great 
Fire of 1 87 1 and extended up to the introduction of the elevated train service to the area in 
1 895. During this period, Milwaukee Avenue became the commercial backbone to a growing 
ethnic neighborhood settled by German and Scandinavian immigrants. 

The second phase of development may be considered to have begun with the introduction of the 
elevated train service in 1 895 at Damen and North Avenue, and ended with the economic 
Depression in 1 929. Business activity on the avenue diversified with the introduction of larger 
department stores, light manufacturing, banks, office buildings, and theatres. In this second 
phase, the Milwaukee Avenue District became a "city within the city," some three miles from the 
Loop. 

First Phase of Development 

In 1 85 1 the boundaries of Chicago were extended to Western and North Avenues, taking in a 
large section of undeveloped land including this portion of Milwaukee Avenue. In the 1 860s 
industrial development along the North Branch of the Chicago River brought jobs that attracted 
German and Scandinavian immigrants to settle on the Northwest Side. At the time of the Great 
Fire in 1 87 1 , the Milwaukee Avenue District was only sparsely developed and emerged from 
the catastrophe unscathed. Eleven days after the fire, W.S. Johnston offered the Committee on 
Aid Society 200 lots on Milwaukee Avenue for the construction of cheap, temporary cottages 




The west side of the 1500-block of Milwaukee Avenue. 




The west side of the 1300-block of Milwaukee Avenue. 




The east side of the 1400-block of Milwaukee Avenue 




Built between the 
1870s and 1920s, the 
Milwaukee Avenue 
District is one of 
Chicago's finest and 
most intact historic 
commercial 
streetscapes. The 
buildings include a 
wide variety of styles 
typical of the late- 
nineteenth and 
early-twentieth 
centuries. 



The west side of the 1300-block of Milwaukee Avenue 



for the homeless. For three years after the Fire, the area was outside of the boundaries enacted 
by the city within which masonry construction was required, thus this part of the Northwest Side 
attracted working-class homeowners drawn to the more affordable wood- frame constructed 
houses. 

The commercial development of Milwaukee Avenue owes much to the successful development 
of the Wicker Park neighborhood. In the 1 870s real estate developer and politician Charles 
Wicker laid out streets and subdivided his landholdings to the west of the Milwaukee Avenue 
District. With its distinctive triangular-shaped park, Wicker Park attracted middle- and upper- 
class German and Scandinavian immigrants who built large, high-style residences around the 
park and nearby streets in the 1 880s and 1 890s. Humboldt Park, less than a mile west of the 
Milwaukee and North Avenue intersection, was improved throughout the 1 880s and contributed 
to the residential development to the area. 

In 1 872, the Chicago Tribune observed a "wonderful increase of business structures" that was 
transforming Milwaukee Avenue from a residential to commercial street. In 1 875, T. A. Holland 
published & Directory of Businesses on Milwaukee Avenue, providing a valuable snapshot of 
the Milwaukee Avenue District in its earliest phase of development. The author described 
Milwaukee Avenue as one of the most important thoroughfares of Chicago on which "a large 
number of stores and buildings of a superior order have been erected, till now the avenue 
presents an almost unbroken front from Kinzie Street to North Avenue. Many of the stores are 
really elegant buildings, in which are kept immense stocks of everything used by families or 
individuals in almost any station in life." 

The Directory shows that the larger and more established businesses were located closer to the 
expanding city center at the southern end of Milwaukee Avenue in 1 875. The section of 
Milwaukee Avenue within the proposed district appears to have been in the early stages of 
development at the northern frontier of what was then considered Milwaukee Avenue. The 
largest business in the district in 1 875 was William Murbach's grocery at Milwaukee and Robey 
(now Damen) Avenues, where a wide range of foods, beer, and wine, as well as feed for 
horses, could be had. Other businesses established in the district in 1 875 included a meat 
market, butcher, another grocer, gunsmith, wagon maker, real estate dealer, and seven saloons. 
In 1 888 the Chicago Tribune described the taverns along Milwaukee Avenue as "handsome 
shops, with well arranged show windows and all the finery of cut-glass and mahogany that the 
American saloonist delights in"; and observed that they were "well patronized, particularly in the 
evening, and all day long the pitcher trade is active." 

Though none of the buildings which housed this first generation of stores appears to have 
survived, Holland's Directory shows that the character of Milwaukee Avenue as a low-cost, 
neighborhood alternative to downtown shops was well-established as early as 1 875. 
The Directory observed that businesses on Milwaukee Avenue primarily served "the large 
resident portion of the northwest part of the city." The author further noted that the buildings 
were owned by the shop keepers themselves who also lived above the store. According to 
Holland, the low overhead of this business model allowed the Milwaukee Avenue merchants to 
sell at lower prices than downtown retailers. 



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Above left and right: Advertisements published in 
Holland's Directory of Businesses on Milwaukee 
Avenue in 1875 document the earliest commer- 
cial activity in the district. 

Left and below: Steinhouse's Citizen's Omnibus 
Line (left) operated horse-drawn coaches on 
Milwaukee Avenue in 1874. The trip from down- 
town to North and Damen Avenues took 36 
minutes. The photo (below) shows a Milwaukee 
Avenue street car in the 1870s. 




The commercial development of the district in the 1 870s was aided by improvements to the 
street and mass transportation. In 1 872, through special assessments on the businesses lining 
Milwaukee Avenue, the city removed the old rotted wood planking, paved Milwaukee Avenue 
with cedar blocks, and installed curbs and street lighting from Kinzie Street north to Damen 
Avenue. Though the planking had been removed, toll gates remained in operation as the last 
vestige of the Northwest Plank Road through the 1 870s. In 1 876, a business owner wrote to 
the Chicago Tribune that the tolls were a "nuisance and drain" on the commercial life of the 
street. The anti-toll sentiments boiled over in 1 88 1 , when a mob burned the toll gate at 
Fullerton and Milwaukee, thus freeing the street for commercial traffic. 

Commercial growth of the Milwaukee Avenue District coincided with continuous improvements 
in public transportation. Horse-drawn cars operated on Milwaukee Avenue as early as the 
1 850s, yet the service remained unreliable until 1 874 when Steinhouse's Citizen's Omnibus Line 
inaugurated service. The trip from State and Randolph Streets downtown to North and Damen 
Avenues took 36 minutes. In 1 890 the horse cars were replaced with cable cars which ran on 
Milwaukee Avenue from downtown north to Campbell Avenue, three-quarters of a mile north of 
the district. Electric-powered streetcars replaced the cable-driven system in 1 906. These 
improvements in the first phase of the district's development established Milwaukee Avenue as a 
bustling commercial thoroughfare, as evidenced by a doubling of real estate values on the 
avenue in the 1 870s. 

Nearly half of the extant buildings in the Milwaukee Avenue District were built between 1877 
and 1 895, in what may be considered its first phase of development. By the 1 880s, the 
"unbroken front" of shops that Holland described in 1 875 had made its way north to the 
intersection of Damen and North Avenues. The dense architectural character of the Milwaukee 
Avenue District evident today was already well-established by three- and four-story buildings 
occupying their entire building lots and with common party walls between them. The buildings 
tended to have narrow and deep plans, occupying only one or two lots. The valuable ground 
floor street level of the buildings was given over to storefronts, while the upper floors were used 
as flats or loft storage. 

Throughout its history, immigration has been a driving force in the commercial development of 
the Milwaukee Avenue District. The Northwest Side has long been a port of entry for 
immigrants, first from Germany and Scandinavia, followed by Poles in the late nineteenth 
century, central and eastern European Jews in the early twentieth century, and finally Latin 
Americans in the late twentieth century. The many shops, services, and businesses on 
Milwaukee formed a "city within the city" three miles from downtown. Here, the daily 
necessities of food, medicine, clothing, banking, and entertainment could be accessed by 
neighborhood residents who tended to share a common ethnic background. This self-contained 
commercial district offered the immigrant communities which it served a familiar and affordable 
alternative to the elite commercial core downtown. As each of these groups became successful, 
they tended to migrate northwest along Milwaukee Avenue to newer neighborhoods, with better 
amenities and housing opportunities. 



8 








Above: Milwaukee Avenue looking south from Evergreen Avenue 
around 1900. The buildings in the foreground on both sides of 
the street survive. 

Below: Following the Haymarket Tragedy in 1886, 200,000 mourners 
lined Milwaukee Avenue for the funeral procession of the men hanged 
for their involvement in the event. The procession travelled south on 

Milwaukee Avenue from Wolcott Avenue to downtown. 




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ANorwegian settler to Wicker Park described Milwaukee Avenue in the 1 880s as a bustling 
community of workers, who in the "early morning hours between six and seven . . . came by the 
thousands, young and old of both sexes" to their places of employment. With its concentration 
of working people, Milwaukee Avenue became an important gathering place for the immigrant 
community. In addition to the many taverns, several social halls were located along Milwaukee 
Avenue. The first hall in the district was built in 1 889 at the southwest corner of Milwaukee and 
Damen Avenues; it housed a branch of the Turnverein, a German ethnic organization that 
promoted physical and cultural education. A second hall was located in the building at 1400 N. 
Milwaukee Avenue, which dates from 1 904. These buildings contained retail shops at street 
level, and large open rooms on upper floors which were used as gymnasiums and performance 
spaces. As early as 1 883, the Columbia Rink (demolished) at 1455 N. Milwaukee offered 
indoor roller skating and served as a venue for political speeches and tent-revival style religious 
meetings. 

In addition to entertainment, social halls and taverns provided a place for political debates, and 
the history of the Milwaukee Avenue District is particularly associated with the political agitation 
of the German ethnic community in the 1 880s. In 1 880 and 1881 the street car operators on 
the Milwaukee Avenue streetcar line went on strike for better wages, resulting in clashes with 
the police on the avenue which eventually required the intervention of federal troops. Attempts 
by temperance groups to restrict the consumption of alcohol on Sundays were met with 
opposition from the many German tavern owners and patrons on Milwaukee Avenue, and in 
1 872 a demonstration and parade was organized on the avenue at which free beer was 
provided. In 1 904 department store clerks on the avenue organized, resulting in a strike at 
Wieboldt's Department Store at 1275-1295 N. Milwaukee Avenue. 

Perhaps the most significant historic event associated with the Milwaukee Avenue District was 
the Haymarket Tragedy of 1 886. The eight anarchists convicted of murder were members of 
the German immigrant community who settled near the Milwaukee Avenue District. Adolph 
Fischer resided one block from the district at 1 334 N. Dean Street, near Milwaukee and 
Paulina. The Chicago Tribune described Fischer's frame cottage as part of a "very radical 
neighborhood." Following the hanging of the eight men, labor and fraternal organizations 
sympathetic to their cause arranged a funeral procession on November 13,1 886. The city 
government permitted the procession on strict terms. The funeral cortege passed on Milwaukee 
Avenue from Wolcott Avenue and proceeded southeast to downtown. The Tribune reported 
that it was the "longest funeral procession ever witnessed in Chicago," attended by more than 
200,000. 

Second Phase of Development 

In 1 895, the Northwest Branch of the Metropolitan Elevated Railroad (now the CTABlue Line) 
was opened at Damen and North Avenues, ushering in what may be considered a second phase 
of development of the Milwaukee Avenue District. Public discussion about constructing an 
elevated train route on Milwaukee Avenue appeared in the Chicago Tribune as early as 1 872. 
An editorial that year asked, "What farmer will come in on a street with an elevated railroad 
over his team? The loss of that trade will destroy half the value of the property, and the noise 
and general obstruction will materially damage the other half." At the urging of business owners, 



10 



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The second phase of historic development in the 
Milwaukee Avenue District saw the construction of 
larger commercial buildings, such as the Wieboldt's 
Department Store building (right) from 1898 at 1275- 
95 N. Milwaukee and the Davis Wallpaper and 
Painters Supply building (above) from 1904 at 1400 
N. Milwaukee Ave., both of which remain. 




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More diverse building types appeared in the 
second phase of the district's development, 
including the Noel State Bank building from 
1919 (above), at 1601-21 N. Milwaukee Ave. and 
the Northwest Tower office building (right) from 
1928, at 1606-08 N. Milwaukee Ave., both of 
which still stand. 



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the elevated tracks were located at the alley just west of the avenue (rather than the street itself), 
preserving natural light and the pedestrian quality of the street. The elevated train provided 
quicker access to downtown and made the Milwaukee Avenue District more accessible from 
the growing neighborhoods to the north and west. The district's commercial importance was 
reflected in larger buildings housing a greater diversity of businesses. 

Immigration continued to drive the economic life of the street. As the German and Scandinavian 
immigrant community began to move from Milwaukee Avenue, a large number of Polish 
immigrants settled in the area in the 1 890s. With the headquarters of several Polish fraternal 
organizations and newspapers located on Milwaukee Avenue, the area became known as the 
"Polish Downtown." In the early decades of the twentieth century Jewish immigrants from 
central and eastern Europe settled in the district. Observing the growing diversity of ethnic 
immigrants settling along the avenue, a contemporary article in the Chicago Tribune compareda 
visittoMilwaukeeAvenuetoa"trip around the world. ... [where] for a couple of nickels the street 
railway will sell you a round-trip excursion ticket guaranteed to give you a glimpse of Ireland at 
Clinton street, of England at Desplaines, of France at Kinzie, to show you all to care to see of 
Germany and Scandinavia, with visits to Poland, Denmark, Hungary, Russia, Italy, Greece, and 
a great variety of interesting points, and then bring you safely back to the United States." During 
this period many of the skilled trades that had sustained the middle-class German and 
Scandinavian immigrant communities were being replaced by industrial processes, and as a 
result the ethnic neighborhood surrounding the Milwaukee Avenue District became more solidly 
working-class than the merchants and craftsmen of the first wave of settlers. 

Land values continued to rise on Milwaukee Avenue in this second phase of development. In 
1 9 1 2 the Chicago Tribune observed that Milwaukee Avenue had experienced a "boom in 
values, which in some of the more favored parts [of the avenue] has been of a sensational 
character." The author cited examples from recent sales which showed that property values on 
the avenue had doubled within a year. 

The Wieboldt's Department Store characterized the economic growth during this period of the 
district's development. It was housed in one of the largest buildings in the district at 1275-1295 
N. Milwaukee Ave. The German-born William Wieboldt built up his fortune by adapting the 
department store retail model established in downtown Chicago to the working-class 
neighborhood clientele living near Milwaukee Avenue. Wieboldt started his first store (The Lion 
Store) on Milwaukee Avenue in a frame building in 1 885. As the business grew, the Lion Store 
occupied larger buildings on the avenue, however in 1 897 the building was destroyed by fire. 
Soon thereafter, Wieboldt began construction on a larger, four-story department store building 
which now stands at 1275-1295 N. Milwaukee. The Chicago Tribune noted that the store 
was a 'landmark in the northwestern part of the city, especially among the poorer people." To 
attract the working-class clientele who lived in the area, Wieboldt's offered more competitively 
priced goods than the downtown stores. Neighborhood customers could also walk to the 
store, saving money on the train fare downtown and delivery of goods back home. 

By the beginning of the 1910s, the Wieboldt store on Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago employed 
700 people and grossed $3 million in annual sales. In addition to Wieboldt's, the large base of 



12 



neighborhood shoppers sustained other department stores in the district, including the Moeller 
Brothers Store (at 1278 N. Milwaukee Ave., built 1 895), Iverson's (in the block of four 
buildings from 1336 to 1352 N. Milwaukee Ave.), and Benson and Rixon's (1295-1299 N. 
Milwaukee Ave., demolished). In 1 888, the Chicago Tribune observed that the merchants of 
Milwaukee Avenue "were not of the New England sort," but catered to ethnic immigrant 
customers. Nevertheless, the paper noted that "there is nothing European about the shops. 
These are fully inviting as those on State Street." 

Light manufacturing also came to the Milwaukee Avenue District in the second phase of its 
development. Wall paper, window shades, and cigar factories were manufactured in the upper 
floors of loft buildings throughout the district. The types of goods manufactured generally 
reflected the dominant retail businesses on Milwaukee Avenue, which tended to be home 
furnishings and clothing. The district sustained a substantial garment and millinery industry, with 
numerous custom tailoring and garment manufacturing and retail clothing shops in the 1 9 1 Os and 
1920s. As industrial activity grew, the upper floors of small commercial buildings which 
originally served as residential flats were converted to workshops. In several buildings in the 
upper floor window openings were enlarged to admit more natural light and ventilation. 

Another important development during this second phase in the 1 9 1 Os and 1 920s was the 
construction of small office buildings and banks in the district . The office buildings included the 
Palatine Building, an 8-story office building at Milwaukee and Paulina Avenues (1913); and the 
12-story Northwest Tower at Milwaukee and Damen (1 928). Banks that were built in the 
district during this period included the white terra cotta Noel State Bank ( 1 9 1 9) at 1 60 1 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. , and the imposing six-story Home Bank and Trust ( 1 925) building, just outside 
the district at Milwaukee and Division (a proposed Chicago Landmark). These office towers 
and bank buildings are important visual landmarks in the district, and they reflect its commercial 
prestige just before the onset of the national economic Depression of the 1 930s. 

Entertainment establishments were another feature in the district's later phase of development. 
From 1 900 to 1 920, seven movie theaters operated in the district, and two of these buildings 
survive. The 275-seat Try It / Wonderland Theater was housed from 1 908- 1 9 1 3 in the two- 
story limestone building which stands at 1335 N. Milwaukee Avenue. Originally used as a 
store, the building was likely converted to a movie theater as the new form of entertainment 
grew in popularity. The other surviving theater building is the former Home/Bell Theater located 
at 1 539 N. Milwaukee Ave. Unlike the Try It/Wonderland, this one-story structure was 
purpose-built for the screening of movies by architect David Saul Klafter in 1 9 1 2, and 
contained 600 seats behind a Classical Revival-style facade. The Home/Bell operated until 
1 92 1 . More compact and less ornate than the movie palaces which appeared in the 1 920s, the 
Home/Bell is especially significant as an early building specifically designed for the exhibition of 
motion pictures, and in 1 9 1 2 it represented an entirely new building type for what was an 
emerging form of entertainment. 

Another distinctive building type in the district is the North Avenue Bath building at 2037 W. 
North Avenue (1921). Bath houses appeared in American cities in the late nineteenth century, 
and they generally consisted of two types. The first were operated by reform-minded municipal 



13 





Above: 1540 (left) and 1444 (right) N. Milwaukee Ave. are typical examples of small commercial 
buildings in the district with street-level storefronts and flats or loft spaces occupying upper floors. 



Below and right: Details of the cast-iron storefront 
system at 1540 N. Milwaukee Ave. The foundry plate 
shows that it was manufactured in Chicago by J. 
Louis Pfau of the Aetna Iron Works. 





14 



governments as a public health measure, especially in poorer areas where many lived in cold 
water flats without bathing facilities. Municipal public baths were often free or charged a 
nominal fee. The North Avenue Baths fell into a second category of bath houses which were 
operated by private for-profit owners with better facilities. In addition to mere hygiene, the for- 
profit bath houses were a place for socializing and relaxation with steam rooms and cafes. Like 
many bath houses from the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the North Avenue Bath 
was located in a neighborhood with a high concentrations of immigrants from central and eastern 
Europe. The bath house was a part of the cultures of these ethnic groups that date back to their 
interactions with the Ottoman Empire. The Sanborn map for 1 9 1 4 indicates that another bath 
building in the district was located at 1 533 N. Milwaukee Ave., but does not survive. 

By the 1 920s, the Milwaukee Avenue District had reached a state of architectural and 
commercial maturity. In 1 927, the local chamber of commerce made improvements to street 
lights, banned sidewalk vendors, and regulated signage in the district to ensure its status as a 
"modern, up-to-date" shopping district second only to the Loop. Just before the onset of the 
economic depression of 1 929, business activity in the district included sales of $30 million for 
food, $5 million for shoes, $5 million for furniture, and $30 million for clothing. The great 
Depression and World War II interrupted the regular flow of immigrants settling in the area, 
resulting in a steady decline of population and business activity. Renewed interest and 
investment in the surrounding Wicker Park and Bucktown neighborhoods in the 1 990s has led 
to a rejuvenation of the commercial character of the Milwaukee Avenue District as a diverse and 
vibrant shopping and entertainment corridor. 



Description of Buildings 

The individual building types and architectural styles in the Milwaukee Avenue District exemplify 
developments in commercial architecture from the late nineteenth through the early twentieth 
centuries. Architectural embellishment and high-quality materials and craftsmanship were 
employed in these commercial buildings to attract customers and to promote the businesses on 
the densely-built street. Taken together, the buildings form a visually rich ensemble with a 
distinct sense and a special character. The district's architecture also conveys the history of 
Chicago's commercial development and the industriousness of the immigrant communities who 
settled here. 

Small Commercial Buildings 

The most predominant building type in the district is made up of three- to four-story commercial 
buildings with a single retail storefront at the street level and storage lofts or residential flats on 
the upper floors. Approximately half of the buildings in the district fall into this category. These 
small commercial buildings were also the earliest buildings in the district, though they continued 
to be built through the 1 920s. The small commercial buildings from the late nineteenth-century 
typically occupy one or two standard-size Chicago lots, making them between 25 and 50 feet in 
width. Later versions of this building type in the district tended to be wider, taking up three to 
four building lots. 



15 



To maximize the expensive commercial real estate, these small buildings fill their entire lots, with 
common party walls shared between neighboring buildings and front facades pushed to the 
sidewalks. In most cases, only the narrow front facades are visible, with the exception of those 
buildings located at corners. The relatively small size of these facades in relation to the entire 
building resulted in a greater concentration of architectural detail and character on building 
fronts. 

The front facades of these small commercial buildings consist of two architecturally distinct 
components: a glazed storefront at street level, with upper stories clad in masonry with regular 
punched window openings. The storefront level typically consisted of a central entrance door 
flanked by large glazed areas for the display of goods and to admit light into the narrow and 
deep shops. Cast-iron storefronts, mass-produced in the late nineteenth century, were common 
and featured narrow support columns that maximized the window area. Other historic 
storefront designs consist of masonry or terra cotta clad piers and supporting lintels which frame 
shop windows. Typical of commercial buildings, several of the original storefronts have since 
been obscured or altered, though many retain the overall transparency of the original design as 
well as some historic details. 

While the street level is given over to the storefront, the upper stories typically have masonry 
walls pierced with one-over-one double-hung sash windows detailed with stone lintels, often 
decorated with carved or incised ornament. Architectural embellishment on the upper portion of 
the facade consists of a variety of materials and forms including carved stone, molded brick, 
terra cotta, and corbelled brick masonry. Pressed metal cornices, dormers, turrets, and 
projecting bays are also a common architectural feature of many of the older commercial 
buildings of the district. Much of this applied architectural ornament was mass-produced and 
readily available to even modest commercial buildings. Shop owners used these architectural 
details to make their businesses stand out in the crowded street, and in several cases used these 
architectural details to inscribe the shop owner's name and the date of construction on the 
facade. 

A noteworthy and rare Chicago example of the architectural potential of pressed metal 
decoration is found at 1 329 to 1 333 N. Milwaukee Ave. Here pressed metal is used not as a 
distinct detail, but as an entire facade cladding system, pressed into Classical Revival 
architectural forms. More typical examples of pressed metal architectural decoration common 
to the district include the three Gothic Revival styled bays from 1 560 to 1 564 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. and the pair of metal cornices at 1408 to 1410 N. Milwaukee Ave. 

In their earliest versions, the small commercial buildings contained residential flats at the upper 
stories with a separate entrance and stairway located at one side of the building. The narrow 
and deep floor plans combined with the lack of windows at the side elevations made these flats 
poorly suited for living space. After the 1 890s, upper stories were more often used as loft 
space for storage or light manufacturing. Larger upper floor windows and the lack of a separate 
side entrance often distinguish the loft buildings from those originally constructed with flats. 



16 






Neighborhood department store 
buildings in the district include the 
decorative sheet-metal-clad 
department store from 1 898 at 1 327- 
33 N. Milwaukee Ave. (top); 
the Wieboldt's department store 
building from 1898 at 1275-95 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. (left); 
the Iverson's department store 
buildings from the 1920s at 1336-52 
N. Milwaukee Ave. (lower left); 
and the Moeller department store 
building from 1895 at 1278 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. (lower right). 




17 



Despite the comparatively small size of these commercial buildings, surviving groupings of 1 870s 
and 1 880s buildings visually convey the "unbroken front" of commercial blocks that T. A. 
Holland observed in 1 875 Directory of the avenue. Good examples of these groups can be 
found from 1425 to 1439 and from 1 534 to 1 554 N. Milwaukee Ave. Though the individual 
facades vary in ornament and materials, the group is unified through common features such as 
the band of street-level storefronts, fenestration patterns, and the unified cornice line. The result 
is a unified streetscape, but with architectural variety. 

From 1 900 through the 1 920s, the commercial buildings constructed in the district were wider, 
often taking up three to four building lots, though the height of the buildings typically remained at 
three to four stories. New exterior cladding systems such as glazed brick and terra cotta 
appeared at this time. Advances in steel construction eliminated the need for load-bearing 
masonry facades, allowing for much larger window openings on the upper stories. These new 
materials and technologies, combined with changes in architectural style, resulted in simpler 
facades in the small commercial buildings that were built in the early twentieth century. 

The Milwaukee Avenue District was a thriving commercial street during its entire period of 
historic significance, a span of over fifty years. In that time, some of the buildings were changed, 
and, compared to the other building types found in the district, the small commercial buildings 
were altered more frequently. Changes to the small commercial buildings, particularly in the 
1 9 1 0s and 1 920s, generally consisted of: replacement of street-level storefronts, replacement 
of entire building facades, reconfiguration and enlargement of upper floor windows, and 
expansion of buildings vertically by adding stories. These changes reflect a business owner's 
desire to upgrade the appearance of the building or to increase its capacity. In many cases, 
changes made to the small commercial buildings during this period are significant due to their 
architectural and historical association with the development of the district, especially in terms of 
its long period of prosperity, the evolution of architectural fashions, advances in building 
materials and technology, and changes in building use. 

Department Store Buildings 

The district contains four neighborhood department store buildings built in the period from the 
1 880s to 1 9 1 1 . These include: the sheet metal-clad department store building at 1 329-33 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. from 1 898; the Moeller Department Store building at 1272-78 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. from 1895; the former Wieboldt's Department Store at 1275-95 N. Milwaukee Ave. 
building from 1 898; and the former Iverson's Department Store building at 1336-38 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. from 1911. 

In terms of building materials and overall form, these neighborhood department stores may be 
seen as an expansion of the small commercial store building type. They are all brick or stone 
masonry, three to four stories in height, with street-level storefronts, although typically much 
wider, occupying between three and nine building lots. And while the smaller commercial 
buildings typically contained differing uses on the upper floors, the department store buildings 
were completely dedicated to a single retail business. As a result, the exteriors tend to express 
less variation between street-level storefronts and upper floors. The department stores tend to 
have less applied exterior ornament than the smaller buildings, relying instead on their overall 



18 







Office buildings in the Milwaukee Avenue District 
include the 8-story Palatine Building from 1913 at 
1286 N. Milwaukee Ave. (left); the 12-story North- 
west Tower building from 1928 at 1606 N. Milwau- 
kee Ave. (upper left and right); and the Flatiron 
building from 1913 at 1565-89 N. Milwaukee Ave. 
(lower right). 



19 



A number of buildings from 
the second phase of the 
District's development repre- 
sent important historic build- 
ing types typically found in 
other historic Chicago com- 
mercial districts. 



The Noel State Bank Building 
from 1919 at 1601 N. Milwau- 
kee Ave. is an important 
visual feature of the six 
corner intersection of Milwau- 
kee, Damen, and North 
Avenues. 




The former Home/Bell movie 
theater from 1912 at 1539 N. 
Milwaukee Ave., a rare 
example of an early movie 
theater and a precursor to 
the much larger movie 
palaces that appeared in the 
1920s. 




The former People's Gas 
Company Building at 1520 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. follows the 
tradition of high quality 
architecture favored by the 
utility. The building is also 
one of many in the District 
that was entirely re-fronted 
during the period of signifi- 
cance. It was constructed in 
1921 as a commercial build- 
ing. When the Gas Company 
acquired the property in 1924, 
they commissioned architect 
Herman Von Hoist to re- 
design the facade. 



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20 



size to stand out in the commercial street. The department stores also borrowed architectural 
treatments that were being developed for commercial office buildings and department stores in 
Chicago's Loop. 

Banks and Small Office Buildings 

The small office buildings in the district are prominent visual landmarks that demonstrate 
Milwaukee Avenue's status as a "a city within the city." Small office buildings reflect the 
growing economic diversity and prosperity of the district in its later phase of development. 

William Wieboldt built the first of these in 1 9 1 3 at 1 286 N. Milwaukee Avenue. Architects 
Huehl, Schmid & Holmes squeezed eight stories onto a single 25 'x 1 00 ' lot. As a result of this 
small footprint, the Palatine Building is a tall and slender mini-skyscraper, and was described by 
a contemporary article in the Chicago Tribune "as one of the finest office buildings outside the 
Loop." The upper six floors, clad in brick, housed 1 7 offices on each floor for the 
administration of the Wieboldt's department store. The first two floors are clad in white terra 
cotta and contained storefronts. 

In the same year, Peter C. Brooks commissioned Holabird & Roche to design the three-story 
Flatiron Building at the southeast corner of Milwaukee and North Avenues. Stores occupied 
the street level, with office spaces on the upper two floors. The exterior is clad in white, black 
and red terra cotta and pierced with large Chicago-school windows. 

The best expression of the office towers in the Milwaukee Avenue District-and certainly one of 
the best neighborhood office building in Chicago-is the Northwest Tower at 1 606 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. Built in 1 928 at the northeast corner of Milwaukee and North Avenues, this 
speculative office tower was designed by the architecture firm of Perkins, Chatten, & 
Hammond. At 12-stories, the limestone-clad tower was built to the maximum height allowed by 
the zoning code, resulting in a contemporary headline on the completion of the tower that read 
"the skyscraper leaves the Loop." Each office space had windows, and was served with water, 
electricity, gas, compressed air (for dental offices), and a central vacuum. Bronze, marble and 
mosaic finishes decorated the lobby. The Northwest Tower was marketed to physicians, 
dentists, and lawyers who were assured of easy access to transportation (located next to the 
Damen Avenue elevated train stop) and a large neighborhood population in need of professional 
services. The small rooftop tower and bronze lantern serve as a prominent visual landmark at 
the northern end of the district. 

Financing for the tower was provided by the Noel State Bank, which had its first building on the 
site of the tower before moving to the bank building at 1 60 1 N. Milwaukee Avenue in 1 9 1 9. 
Neighborhood banks were often responsible for the construction of 6- to 12-story 
neighborhood office skyscrapers on or near major commercial intersections in Chicago 
neighborhoods. Similar-sized buildings that still stand in Chicago are the Uptown Bank Building 
( 1 924, Marshall & Fox; 1 928 addition, Huszagh and Hill), Hyde Park State Bank Building 
(1928, Karl M. Vitzthum), and West Town State Bank Building (1929-30, Mundie & Jensen), 
the latter being a designated Chicago Landmark. 



21 




Above and right: The North Avenue 
Bath building from 1924 at 2037-41 
W. North Ave. features stylized fish 
and other aquatic-themed terra 
cotta ornament. 




Below: The CTA Blue Line station house beneath the 
elevated tracks at 1556 N. Damen Ave. was built in 1894 by 
the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railway Company. 




22 



Other Building Types 

In addition to the shopping and office buildings, there are other buildings in the district that 
represent common building types found in Chicago's older commercial districts, and these 
include small movie theaters, banks, and non-commercial public buildings. 

Theaters appeared in the district as early as the 1 887 with the establishment of the Star Theater 
(demolished) at the site of the Columbia Rink at 1455 N. Milwaukee Ave. In 191 1, the 
Chicago Tribune reported that The Star offered "only the best attractions in burlesque and 
vaudeville, and strictly enforces its rules requiring any word or phrase that would be 
objectionable to women and children to be carefully eliminated." By the 1 9 1 Os there were 
seven small movie theaters in the district, only two of which survive. The Home/Bell Theater at 
1 539 N. Milwaukee Ave. built in 1 9 1 2, is a very early example of a small neighborhood movie 
theater, a transitional form between the nickelodeons that preceded it and the large movie 
palaces that appeared in the 1920s. This one-story theater had seating for 600. The 
symmetrical Classical Revival-style facade features engaged pilasters, medallions, and half- 
round window openings. The second surviving theater, the Try It/Wonderland, was located in 
the circa 1 900 two-story limestone-faced building at 1 3 3 5 N. Milwaukee Ave. As with many 
early movie theaters, the building was likely originally built as a store, but converted to a movie 
house as the emerging form of entertainment became popular. 

The Noel State Bank Building (now the Midwest Bank & Trust Company) was built in 1 9 1 9 at 
the northwest corner of North and Damen Avenues. Illinois state law in the early twentieth 
century prohibited banks from building branches, resulting in the construction of many large and 
architecturally significant bank buildings in neighborhoods at the intersection of large commercial 
streets. The Noel State Bank Building is a fine example of these independent neighborhood 
financial institutions from this period. The structure occupies a triangular-shaped site and is a 
distinct visual feature of the district. Designed by Gardner C. Coughlen in a dignified Classical 
Revival-style, the design of the bank expresses an image of permanence and security. The 
exterior is clad entirely in ornamental terra cotta. Large windows are divided by engaged 
pilasters topped with Corinthian capitals, and a prominent cornice wraps around the rounded 
corners of the building. 

The district contains other institutional buildings that fall outside the category of retail commerce, 
but which are fine representatives of historic building types found elsewhere in Chicago. The 
People's Gas Company Building at 1 520 N. Milwaukee Ave. features a terra cotta Classical 
temple facade designed by Herman Von Hoist in 1 924. The utility operated service centers in 
several neighborhoods during the period, including two that are Chicago Landmarks in South 
Chicago and the Portage Park neighborhoods. The 1 -story CTA Blue Line station house 
beneath the elevated tracks at 1556-58 N. Damen Ave. was built in 1 894 by the Metropolitan 
West Side Elevated Railway Company. With its ornate pressed-brick facade, the station is one 
of the oldest-surviving historic elevated rail station houses in the city . Finally the three-story 
building at 2041 W. North Ave., designed by A. L. Levy & William Klein in 1924, is a very fine 
example of a bath house from the period. In the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, 
bath houses appeared in major urban centers like Chicago, especially in densely populated 
neighborhoods where they served hygienic, recreational, and social purposes. The Classical 



23 












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The earliest 
architectural style 
found in the 
Milwaukee 
Avenue District is 
the Italianate. 
Excellent 
examples of the 
style include 1440 
N. Milwaukee 
Ave. from c. 1880s 
(top right); 1360 
N. Milwaukee 
Ave. from c. 1880s 
(lower right). 
Stone lintels with 
incised foliate 
ornament (top left) 
are a typical 
feature of the 
style. 



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24 



Revival-style white terra cotta exterior, trimmed with pale blue and green, evokes cleanliness 
and hygiene. The highly stylized fish which decorate the parapet and window openings are 
another reference to the function of the building. 

Architectural Styles 

Buildings within the Milwaukee Avenue District display important architectural styles used for 
commercial buildings found in late nineteenth- and early twentieth century Chicago, including 
Italianate, Queen Anne, Chicago School Commercial, Arts and Crafts, Classical Revival, and 
ArtDeco. 

The Italianate-style was originally inspired by the villas of northern Italy. The early nineteenth 
century architect Andrew Jackson Downing helped popularize the style during the 1 840s and 
1 850s with the publication of influential pattern books-publications illustrated with building 
designs, plans, and details that could be built by carpenters and builders using the book as a 
guide. The Italianate style's easy adaptability in terms of materials and detailing made it nearly a 
national style by the Civil War era, and it remained popular into the 1 880s for many types of 
commercial buildings, including both residential and commercial. 

The Italianate was Chicago's predominant architectural style during the 1 870s and 1 880s, an 
important period of development for the Milwaukee Avenue District. The earliest buildings in 
the proposed district are Italianate and are characterized by red brick walls and contrasting 
stone trim. Stone lintels with carved foliate ornament, and prominent cornices with brackets and 
dentil molding are common features of the style. Particularly good examples of the Italianate- 
style include the three-story brick store & flat building at 141 8-20 N. Milwaukee Ave., built in 
1 879, and the 4-story stone-faced commercial building from the 1 880s at 1 538 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. 

Eclecticism is the hallmark of the Queen Anne-style, which was popular in Chicago during the 
1880s and 1 890s. The name was coined in 1 9th-century England to describe asymmetrical 
buildings that combined medieval and classical forms and ornament. The sprawling manor 
houses of English architect Richard Norman Shaw from this period were well known to 
American architects of the period and served as an inspiration. In America, the Queen Anne 
originally was used for suburban houses and seaside resort cottages, but it quickly became a 
popular style for urban residences and commercial buildings. 

Corner turrets, projecting bays, gabled rooflines, grouped windows, and a mixture of exterior 
building materials, including brick, terra cotta, stone, and metal — providing visual "texture" that 
continues to delight the eye. There are many Queen Anne-style buildings in the district; 
especially good examples include 1444 and 1462 N. Milwaukee Ave. and the three buildings 
from 1560 to 1564N. Milwaukee Ave. 

The department store buildings in the district show the influence of the Chicago School of 
commercial architecture. During the 1880's and '90s, Chicago architects designed buildings 
with exteriors clearly expressing their innovative steel-frame structural systems. Later identified 
as "Chicago School" buildings, they served as important precursors to 20th-century steel-and- 



25 



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Later architectural styles 
represented in the district 
include thee. 1880s 
Queen Anne-style 
commercial building (top 
left) at 1560 N. Milwaukee 
Ave.; a fine example of 
the Chicago School of 
architecture is the 1913 
Flatiron Building (top 
right) at 1565-69 N. 
Milwaukee Ave.; the Arts 
and Crafts-style store 
building with 
"Sullivanesque" detail 
from 1910 (lower left) is at 
1521 N. Milwaukee Ave.; 
the Classical Revival-style 
detail from 1888 (lower 
right) is at 1431 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. 



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26 



glass skyscrapers. Common features of these buildings include facades dominated by large 
window openings, vertical pilasters, recessed spandrel panels, and minimal use of ornament. 
The Wieboldt's department store building at 1275-95 N. Milwaukee Ave. from 1898 shows all 
the typical characteristics of this style. The Moeller 's department store building at 1278 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. from 1 895 also exhibits features of the Chicago School, with its three part 
facade organization of base, shaft, and capital. 

The Classical Revival-style first became popular in the 1 890s particularly due to the influence 
of the World's Columbian Exposition, held in Chicago in 1 893, as was the 1909 Plan of 
Chicago. Buildings constructed in this style utilize a variety of Classical forms and details 
derived the architecture of ancient Greece and Rome and the buildings of later, Classical- 
influenced eras such as the Renaissance, Baroque, and Rococo periods. The style remained 
popular for institutional and large commercial buildings well into the 1 920s. The Noel State 
Bank building at 1 60 1 N. Milwaukee Ave. ( 1 9 1 9), the North Avenue Bath building at 204 1 W. 
North Ave. ( 1 92 1 ), and the People's Gas Company Building at 1 520 N. Milwaukee Ave. 
(1924) are very good examples of this style in terra cotta. 

Buildings in the district from the 1 9 1 0s and 1 920s also show the influence of the Arts and 
Crafts-style. By the early 1 900s, this broad aesthetic movement had taken hold of popular 
American imagination. Originating from progressive European architecture of the 1 890s, the 
Arts & Crafts style emphasized simple ornament based on nature and avoidance of historic 
forms. The visual appearance of the building was based on the innate characteristics, color, and 
texture of its materials. Three buildings in the district are decorated with "Sullivanesque" terra 
cotta. This mass-produced ornament based on interpretations of Louis Sullivan's ornamental 
style is associated with the Arts and Crafts aesthetic. Buildings such as those at 1 542-46 N. 
DamenAve. and 1306 N. Milwaukee Ave. exhibit influence of this style. 

The Art Deco-style is the latest of the architectural styles represented in the district. Popular in 
the 1 920s and 1 930s, the style emphasized vertically, stripped down forms, and low relief 
ornament based on abstracted natural or geometric forms. The purest and most prominent 
example of this style is the Northwest Tower building at 1606 N. Milwaukee Ave. (1928), but 
other smaller iterations of the style include Edward Steinborn's brick storefront design at 1366 
N. Milwaukee Ave., and Slupkowski & Piontek's commercial building at 1463 N. Milwaukee 
Ave., with its fine low relief carving, both from 1929. 

In some cases, buildings in the district do not fall neatly into any one style, but display a variety 
of stylistic influences. This mixing of architectural motifs was especially common in the smaller 
commercial buildings of the late-nineteenth century where mass-produced architectural 
ornament was more readily combined. 

In addition to presenting fine examples of historic styles of architecture, the buildings in the 
district exhibit fine historic building materials and skilled building craftsmanship. The carved 
stone, ornate brick masonry, and pressed metal ornament found in the older Queen- Anne and 
Italianate buildings convey solidity and skilled craftsmanship. Later stylistic developments such 
as the Art Deco and Craftsman-styles show the influence of new building techniques and 



27 



Examples of buildings which exhibit changes that were made during the period of historic 
significance and reflect the continuing evolution of the District: 




1550 N. Milwaukee Ave. (above) was built in 1881 as a 
two-story commercial building. A year later, the third 
story was added. In 1919 the window openings were 
enlarged. The changes reflect the continued economic 
vitality of the district, which encouraged the 
enlargement and physical remodeling of building 
facades to reflect latest building design trends and 
adopt them to new uses. 





1474 N. Milwaukee Ave. (above) was 
built in 1883. Historic construction 
permits for the building confirm that it 
was completely re-fronted in 1913. 




1459 N. Milwaukee Ave. (above) was built in 1886. Maurice Niederman bought the building in 
1922, and hired architects Koenigsberg & Weisfeld to remodel the building for his furniture and 
carpet store. The fine terra-cotta storefront dates from this period. 

28 



materials, specifically steel-frame construction and the rich ornamental possibilities of 
architectural terra cotta. The historic materials, details and craftsmanship found in the district 
are uncommon today. 



Early Changes to Buildings in the District 

Change is an inevitable condition of commercial districts that thrive over many decades, and 
several buildings in the Milwaukee Avenue District reveal later architectural changes made 
during the period of historic significance. Commercial prosperity, evolution of popular 
architectural tastes, new building materials and technologies, and changes in building use, among 
others, all contributed to the alteration of commercial buildings. In many cases these changes 
are architecturally and historically significant, and reflect the continued economic vitality and 
evolution of the neighborhood. Some changes are clearly visible, while others are skillfully 
integrated with the architectural character of the building and only reveal themselves in building 
permit records or historic photos. Most of these changes occurred during the 1 9 1 Os and 
1 920s, and earlier, and were made to buildings originally constructed in the 1 870s through the 
1890s. 

The architectural density of the district restricted additions, and the narrow facades of the 
buildings limited the amount of the building exterior that could be changed. Where architectural 
changes did occur, these conditions tended to concentrate alterations to the front facades or 
expansion of the buildings vertically by adding stories. Another less extensive, but common, 
alteration found in the district was a change to the fenestration of upper stories. 

The largest examples of re-fronted buildings includes the three neighboring buildings from 1 342 
to 1 352 N. Milwaukee Ave. Building permits for these buildings show they were built between 
1886 and 1 894, yet the facades on all three buildings were changed in the 1 920s. Other 
examples of completely re-fronted buildings in the district include 1 306 N. Milwaukee Ave. 
(builtc. 1880s and re-fronted in 1913), 1308 N.Milwaukee Ave. (built c. 1880s and re- 
fronted in 1913), 1437N. Milwaukee Ave. (built 1886 and re-fronted c. 1910), and 1474 N. 
Milwaukee Ave. (builtc. 1883 and re-fronted in 1913). 

Changes to street-level storefronts have also been common in the district. A good example is 
at 1459 N. Milwaukee Ave. which was built in 1 886. Maurice Niederman bought the building 
in 1 922, and hired architects Koenigsberg & Weisfeld to remodel the building for his furniture 
and carpet store. The 1 922 remodeling included an updated storefront design in terra cotta. 

The addition of stories to buildings in the district was less common, but often occurred within 
five years of the original construction. In most cases the added stories were seamlessly 
integrated onto the original building. Good examples include 1 3 3 6-3 8 N. Milwaukee Ave. 
which was built in 1 9 1 1 and had 2 stories added in 1 9 1 9; and 1 400-06 N. Milwaukee Ave., 
which was built in 1 904 and had 1 -story added in 1 909. 

Changes in fenestration on upper floors were a more common alteration in the district. In most 
cases these involved replacing several small window openings with larger Chicago-school 



29 





1467 N. Milwaukee Ave. 



1439 N. Milwaukee Ave. 



Pressed metal, 
terra cotta, and 
masonry 
architectural 
details in the 
Milwaukee 
Avenue District 
reveal a high 
degree of 
craftsmanship in 
high quality 
materials. 




2041 W. North Ave., North Avenue Baths Building 



1463 N. Milwaukee Ave. 




1462 N. Milwaukee Ave. 



1323 N. Milwaukee Ave. 

30 



1302 N. Milwaukee Ave. 



windows. The adoption of steel lintels in masonry construction permitted larger window 
openings than had not been possible in the 1 880s. In the period before high output artificial 
lighting, the larger window openings permitted the conversion of upper floors from residential 
flats to retail or light manufacturing uses. Good examples of early re-fenestration in the district 
can be seen at 1310, 1328, 1351-55, and 1370 N. Milwaukee Ave. These window changes 
reflect the increased commercial development of the district in the 1 9 1 0s and 1 920s as upper 
floors residential flats were converted to lofts, workshops, and light manufacturing which 
required increased natural light and ventilation. 

Criteria for Designation 

According to the Municipal Code of Chicago (Sec. 2-120-690), the Commission on Chicago 
Landmarks has the authority to make a recommendation of landmark designation to the City 
Council for a building, structure, or district if the Commission determines it meets two or more 
of the stated "criteria for landmark designation," as well as possesses a significant degree of its 
historic design integrity. 

The following should be considered by the Commission on Chicago Landmarks in determining 
whether to recommend that the Milwaukee Avenue District be designated as a Chicago 
Landmark. 

Criterion 1: Critical Part of the City's History 

Its value as an example of the architectural, cultural, economic, historic, social or other 
aspect of the heritage of the City of Chicago, the State of Illinois or the United States. 

• The Milwaukee Avenue District is one of Chicago's finest and oldest intact historic 
commercial districts, with rich architecture and a long history spanning five decades of 
development from the late-nineteenth through the early twentieth centuries. 

• The Milwaukee Avenue District has played an important role in the development and 
expansion of Chicago, serving as a hub and conduit for commercial activity, 
transportation, and the settlement of the Northwest Side. 

• The Milwaukee Avenue District has served as a port of entry for generations of 
immigrants and conveys the history of the various ethnic communities who built, lived, 
and prospered on Milwaukee Avenue. The buildings serve as an important physical link 
to the social and cultural life of the many ethnic communities that have populated the 
neighborhood. 

• Built predominantly between the early 1 870s and 1 929, the buildings within the 
Milwaukee Avenue District exemplify the importance of local shopping and professional 
service districts in the economic life of Chicago's neighborhoods during this dynamic 
period in the city's history. 



31 



Criterion 4: Important Architecture 

Its exemplification of an architectural type or style distinguished by innovation, rarity, 
uniqueness or overall quality of design, detail, materials, or craftsmanship. 

• The commercial buildings in the Milwaukee Avenue District are fine examples of 
American commercial architecture from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. 
The collection of buildings remains one of the finest and most intact such groupings in 
Chicago. 

• The rich architectural character of the District refelects the commercial property owners 
who used high-quality materials and stylish facade designs to promote their businesses. 

• The buildings within the Milwaukee Avenue District exemplify a broad range of historic 
styles of architecture, including the Italianate, Queen Anne, Classical Revival, Arts and 
Crafts, and Art Deco styles. These styles are representative of important periods of 

Chicago's development. 

• The buildings within the Milwaukee Avenue District display exceptionally fine 
craftsmanship and detailing in brick, stone, terra cotta, pressed and cast metal. 

Criterion 6: Distinctive Theme as a District 

Its representation of an architectural, cultural, economic, historic, social, or other theme 
expressed through distinctive areas, districts, places, buildings, structures, works of art, 
or other objects that may or may not be contiguous. 

• The streetscape in the Milwaukee Avenue District possesses an unusually intact and 
distinctive visual unity based on density, consistent scale, building setbacks, overall 
design, and use of materials and detailing. 

• The Milwaukee Avenue District conveys important themes from Chicago 's economic 
and social history, including ethnic immigration and neighborhood commercial 
development. 

• The Milwaukee Avenue District possesses a distinct sense of place as a "city within the 
city" through its rich architecture and its continued economic vitality. 

Criterion 7: Unique Visual Feature 

Its unique location or distinctive physical appearance or presence representing an 
established and familiar visual feature of a neighborhood, community, or the City of 
Chicago. 

• The Milwaukee Avenue District is a visually distinctive place in Chicago due to the 
abundance and quality of its historic commercial buildings which form a significant and 
unusually intact ensemble and streetscape. 



32 




1565-89 N. Milwaukee Ave., The Flatiron Building 





1520 N. Milwaukee Ave., former People's 
Gas, Light & Coke Co. Building 



1308 N. Milwaukee Ave., former Rabinovitch and Ogus 
Millinery 






1478 N. Milwaukee Ave. 



1284 N. Milwaukee 1426 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. Ave. 



33 



• Milwaukee Avenue and its six-point intersection with Damen and North Avenues is a 
well-travelled transportation hub and point of orientation in Chicago. 

Integrity Criterion 

The integrity of the proposed landmark must be preserved in light of its location, design, 
setting, materials, workmanship and ability to express its historic community, 
architectural or aesthetic interest or value. 

While intact individual historic commercial buildings survive throughout Chicago, it is rare to find 
commercial streetscapes from this period of the size, quality, and degree of physical integrity 
possessed by the Milwaukee Avenue District. The District possesses fine physical integrity in 
both its overall streetscape and in the majority of its individual buildings. 

Most individual buildings retain the majority of physical characteristics that define their historic 
significance. These include historic wall materials, including brick and stone, as well as 
significant architectural details such as terra cotta ornament, carved and incised stone lintels, 
pressed metal window bays and cornices, and cast-iron store fronts. Although a number of 
buildings have had changes to historic storefronts (which is not an uncommon condition for 
commercial buildings), a majority retain the door and window configuration and overall 
transparency that were characteristics of their historic appearance. In some instances where 
storefronts have been covered with later materials, original historic cast-iron elements survive 
and later insensitive changes may be reversible. 

As has been described in this report, many buildings in the district exhibit alterations that date 
from the period of historic significance. In addition to storefronts, these historic changes may 
include the replacement of front facades, the addition of stories, and the re-configuration of 
window openings. These early alterations reflect the historic development and economic 
prosperity of the district, during which time building technology, architectural style, and building 
functions and space needs evolved. In general, the age, historic material, craftsmanship, and 
integration of these historic alterations contributes to the overall physical integrity of the district. 

There are also later building changes in the district which are not historically significant. The 
most common of these are inappropriate storefront alterations, replacement windows, and the 
loss of building cornices, beginning in the 1 950s. For the most part, these alterations and losses 
are reversible, and the historic character of most of the buildings in the district is recoverable 
through rehabilitation and restoration. 

Although a few buildings within the District were built after the period of historic significance, in 
general the building lot sizes, height, placement, and setback of the later buildings has respected 
the scale and character of the historic buildings. Many of these later buildings carry on the 
function of retail commerce, and the relationship of storefronts to the sidewalk, and the general 
configuration of door and window openings of these newer buildings remains consistent with the 
historic commercial buildings in the district. When seen as a "whole," the new buildings do not 
detract from the overall character of the District and the historic streetscape. 



34 



The historic integrity of the Milwaukee Avenue District is also established by its continued function 
as an active neighborhood commercial street. The many retail stores, taverns, restaurants, and its 
easy access to public transportation reflects historic themes that established the district's 
popularity. The overall sense of place as a "city within the city" remains strong within the 
Milwaukee Avenue District. 

Significant Historical 

and Architectural Features 

Whenever a district is under consideration for landmark designation, the Commission on Chicago 
Landmarks is required to identify the "significant historical and architectural features" of the 
district. This is done to enable the owners and the public to understand which elements are 
considered most important to preserve the historical and architectural character of the proposed 
landmark district. 

Based on its evaluation of the Milwaukee Avenue District, the Commission recommends that the 
significant features be identified as: 

all exterior building elevations, including rooflines, visible from the public rights-of-way. 

for the purposes of Sec. 2-120-825 only governing permits for demolition, the significant 
historical and architectural features shall be identified as all exterior elevations and the roof. 




1520 N. Milwaukee Ave., former People's Gas, Light & Coke Co. Building 



35 



Selected Bibliography 

Andreas, A.T. History of Cook County Illinois . Chicago: A.T. Andreas, Publisher, 1 884. 
"Armitage Halsted District." Chicago: Commission on Chicago Landmarks, 2002. 
Blumenson, John J. Identifying American Architecture: A Pictorial Guide to Styles and 

Terms, 1600-1945. 2 nd ed. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1981. 
Brand, Stewart. How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They 're Built. New York: 

Viking, 1994. 
Chicago Transit Authority. Historical Information, 1859-1965. Chicago: Chicago Transit 

Authority, 1966. 
Chicago Tribune, various dates, 1853 - 1880. 
City of Chicago. Historic Building Permit Records. 
Coorens, Elaine A. Wicker Park from 1673 through 1929 and Walking Tour Guide. 

Chicago: Old Wicker Park Committee, 2003. 
The Edison-Norwood Weekly, November 10, 1927. 

"Goldblatt Brothers Department Store," Chicago: Commission on Chicago Landmarks, 1 997. 
Gowans, Alan. Styles and Types of North American Architecture, Social Function and 

Cultural Expression. New r York: Harper Collins Publishers, 1992. 
Greater Chicago Magazine. Vol. IV, no. 2, February 1929. Chicago: Chicago Boosters' 

Publicity Club. 
Granacki, Victoria. Images of America: Chicago s Polish Downtown. Chicago: Arcadia 

Publishing, 2004. 
Holland s Milwaukee Avenue Directory. Chicago, Western Publishing Company, 1875. 
Longstreth, Richard. The Buildings of Main Street: A Guide to American Commercial 

Architecture. Washington: Preservation Press, 1987. 
Longstreth, Richard. "Bringing 'Downtown' to the Neighborhoods." Buildings and 

Landscapes Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum 14(2007): 13-49. 
Lovoll, Odd Sverre. A Century of Urban Life: the Norwegians in Chicago Before 1930. 

Northfield, Minn.: Norwegian-American Historical Association; Champaign, 111.: 

Distributed by University of Illinois Press, 1 988. 
Milwaukee Avenue Newspaper, February, 20, 1929. 
Moffat, Bruce G The li L ": The Development of Chicago s Rapid Transit System 1888- 

1932. Chicago: Central Electric Railfans' Association, 1995. 
Pacyga, Dominic A. and Ellen Skerrett. Chicago: City of Neighborhoods . Chicago: Loyola 

University Press, 1986. 
Rifkind, Carole. A Field Guide to American Architecture. New York: New American Library, 

1980. 
Sydney A. Mandel. Vintage Chicago, 1918. Typed manuscript. Chicago History Museum. 
"West Town State Bank Building" Chicago: Commission on Chicago Landmarks, 2002. 
Whiffen, Marcus. American Architecture since 1 780, A Guide to the Styles. Cambridge: 

M.I.T. Press, 1969. 
"Wicker Park District." Chicago: Commission on Chicago Landmarks, 1989. 
Wicker Park Eagle, various months 1909 - 1913. Chicago: Wicker Park Eagle Pub. Co. 



36 



Address Ranges 

The Milwaukee Avenue District is comprised of buildings within the following address ranges: 

1 272- 1 6 1 2 N. Milwaukee Ave. (evens) 
1273-1621 N. Milwaukee Ave. (odds) 
1 542- 1 6 1 N. Damen Ave. (evens) 
1547-1607 N. Damen Ave. (odds) 
1948-2016 W. North Ave. (evens) 
1935-2043 W. North Ave. (odds) 
2000-2006 W. Pierce Ave. (evens) 
1416-1430 N. Honore St. (evens) 
1 500- 1 5 1 N. Honore St. (evens) 
1417-1431 N. Honore St. (odds) 
1501-1511 N. Honore St. (odds) 
1 800- 1 8 1 4 W. Evergreen Ave. (evens) 
1801-1815 W. Evergreen Ave. (odds) 
1386-1398 N. Wolcott Ave. (evens) 
1389-1399 N. Wolcott Ave. (odds) 
1330-1340 N. Wood St. (evens) 
1406-1416 N. Wood St. (evens) 
1331-1341 N. Wood St. (odds) 
1401-1407 N. Wood St. (odds) 
1753-1759 W. Beach Ave. (odds) 
1286-1294 N. Hermitage Ave. (evens) 
1287-1295 N. Hermitage Ave. (odds) 
1326-1338 N. Paulina St. (evens) 
1260-1270 N. Paulina St. (evens) 
1323-1329 N. Paulina St. (odds) 
1261-1271 N. Paulina St. (odds) 



37 



Building Catalog 

The categorization of whether a property is contributing or non-contributing to the Milwaukee Avenue District 
represents a preliminary determination by the Landmarks Division staff only. It is solely provided as guidance 
for property owners and the public to anticipate how these properties might be treated under the Chicago 
Landmarks Ordinance. Individual property owners retain the right to petition the Commission on Chicago 
Landmarks and the City Council on whether a building is contributing or non-contributing to the district on a 
case-by-case basis as part of the permit review process. The Commission and the City Council reserve the right 
to make a final determination in accordance with the procedures established by the Ordinance and the 
Commission 's adopted Rules and Regulations. The staff's preliminary determination remains preliminary — it is 
not binding on the Landmarks Division staff or the Commission on Chicago Landmarks, nor does the 
Commission or the City Council adopt it as part of the designation. 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of Architect / 
Construction (Builder) 



Contributing 



1275-1295 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


4- story brick 
department 
store bldg. 


Wieboldt's 

Department 

Store 


1897-99, 
additions 1911, 
1921-22 


Robert C. Berlin 
/ (L. Leach & 
Son) 


Contributing 


1278 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story 
limestone 
department 
store bldg. 


Moeller 
Brothers 
Department 
Store 


1895 




Contributing 


1282 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


John F. Dugan 


1887 




Contributing 


1284 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 


De Belle's 
Millinery 


c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1286 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


8-story office 
bldg. (Palatine 
Bldg.) 


William A. 
Wieboldt 


1913 


Huehl, Schmid 
& Holmes 


Contributing 


1287 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 1980s 




Non-contributing 


1300 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


B. Christensen 


1887 


Christian 0. 
Hansen 


Non-contributing 


1302 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Mrs. Emile 
Johnson 


1914 


Troman & 
Johnson 


Contributing 



38 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1306 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 




c. 1910s 


M. J. Marhouse 


Contributing 


1308 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story terra 
cotta 

commercial 
bldg. 


Rabinovitch & 
Ogus, milliners 


c. 1910s 


David Saul 
Klafter / (W. J. 
Ratlidge) 


Contributing 


1310 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fenstration c. 
1910s) 




c. 1880s 




Potentially 
Contributing 


1314-16 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story terra 
cotta store & 
loft bldg. 


Mark 
Rosenberg 


1924 


Dubin & 
Eisenberg / 
(Julius Gann) 


Contributing 


1317 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 1960s 




Non-contributing 


1318-20 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Uhlman, 
Nusbaum & 
Bernstein 


1916 


Maurice Spitzer / 
(H. M. Lipman) 


Contributing 


1321 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




n. d. 




Non-contributing 


1323 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 


C. Schroeder 


1885 




Contributing 


1324 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


H. Dunstein 


1916 


Maurice Spitzer / 
(H. M. Lipman) 


Contributing 


1326 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Potentially 
Contributing 


1328 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fenstration c. 
1910s) 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 



39 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1330 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1332 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story glazed 
brick store & 
loft bldg. 


National Tea 
Company 


1909 


Charles F. 
Sorensen 
(Holmes & 
Jordan) 


Contributing 


1327-33 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3-story pressed 
metal-clad 
department 
store bldg. 


M. Krause 


1898 


Frommann & 
Jebsen 


Contributing 


1335 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story 
limestone 
movie theater 




c. 1900s 




Contributing 


1336-38 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


4- story brick 
department 
store bldg. 
(two stories 
added in 1919) 


L.H. Zillmany 


1911 


Worthmann & 
Steinbach 


Contributing 


1342-44 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fronted c. 
1910s) 


H. P. Larson 


1892 




Contributing 


1339-41 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. 


2-story brick 
bank bldg. 


Krause State 
Bank 


1917 


Frommann & 
Jebsen 


Contributing 


1343 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 




c. 1929 




Contributing 


1347 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
department 
store building 


Carl 
Langendorf 


1912 


Maurice Spitzer / 

(William 

Bergman) 


Contributing 


1348 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fronted c. 
1920s) 


E. Schroeder 


1895 




Contributing 



40 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1352 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fronted 1923) 


F. C. Tumler 


1886 




Contributing 


1351 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fenestration c. 
1910s) 


Robert Yoffke 


1892 




Potentially 
Contributing 


1355 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fenestration c. 
1910s) 


Robert Yoffke 


1892 




Potentially 
Contributing 


1357 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


S. Singer 


1911 


S. Milton 
Euhberg 


Contributing 


1359 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 
commercial 
bldg. 

(originally 4- 
stories) 




c. 1910s 




Non-contributing 


1360 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1361 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 
commercial 
bldg. 

(originally 4- 
stories) 




c. 1910s 




Non-contributing 


1362 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 
limestone 
commercial 
bldg. 




c. 1940s 




Non-contributing 


1365 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 




1949 




Non-contributing 


1366 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 
store 


Herman R. 
Misch 


1929 


Edward 
Steinborn / 
(Morris Handler) 


Contributing 
(Facade only) 



41 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1368 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 


William 
Hoffman 


1903 


(H. Leuna) 


Non-contributing 


1369 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story bldg. 
(originally 2- 
stories) 


Royal Theater 


c. 1910s 




Non-contributing 


1370 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fenestration c. 
1920s) 


A. Mihlein 


1886 




Contributing 


1371 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1372 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 1970s 




Non- contributing 


1373 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Roselia Speir 


1893 




Contributing 


1375 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


P. Sarin 


1916 


Otto Runde / 
(Stern Lemke) 


Contributing 


1379 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
warehouse 


L. Sigman 


1913 


S. Milton 
Eichberg / (H. 
Sheehan Bros.) 


Contributing 


1383 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1385 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


William Weber 


1886 




Contributing 


1389 N.Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story 

limestone store 
& flat bldg. 


M. Friend 


1894 




Contributing 



42 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1391 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




1889 




Potentially 
Contributing 


1393-97 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


4- story brick 

residential 

bldg. 




c. 2005 




Non-contributing 


1400-06 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. 


4- story brick 
commercial 
bldg. & hall 
(fourth story 
added 1909) 


Edward 
Uihlein 


1904 


(William 
Ritchie) 


Contributing 


1401-07 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 

(storefront is 
from 1926) 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1409 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 
commercial 
bldg. 

(originally 3- 
stories; 
storefront is 
from 1926) 




c. 1880s 




Non-contributing 


1408 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


H. Nedekind 


1883 




Contributing 


1410 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1415 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Carl Heinz 


1878 




Contributing 


1416 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story bank 
bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1417-19 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Max Fauber 


1910 


(Max Fauber) 


Contributing 



43 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1418-20 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Sachs Brothers 


1879 




Contributing 


1421 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1910 




Contributing 


1425 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1427 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


George Strauss 


1887 




Contributing 


1422-26 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Jacob Helmke 


1881 




Contributing 


1429 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


John Jensen 


1887 




Contributing 


1431 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


John Jensen 


1888 




Contributing 


1435 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Wicker 
Furniture Co. 


c. 1920s 




Contributing 


1437 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Wicker 
Furniture Co. 


c. 1920s 




Contributing 


1438 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 
store bldg. 
(Re-fronted c. 
1950s) 


George Strang 


1909 




Non-contributing 


1439 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


C. J. Zuehlke 


1891 




Contributing 


1440 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 



44 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1441 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 


L. Hoeft 


1909 


Fritz Lang 


Contributing 


1442 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 2005 




Non-contributing 


1443 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 1910s 




Contributing 


1444 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Frederick Bock 


1892 




Contributing 


1446 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 1980s 




Non-contributing 


1455 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
bank bldg. 




c. 1990s 




Non-contributing 


1456 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story 
limestone 
residential 
bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1459 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 

(storefront 
from 1922) 


C. Giesecke 


1886 




Contributing 


1463 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story 
limestone 
commercial 
bldg. 


B. Wojlal 


1929 


Slupkowski & 
Piontek / 
(Janowski) 


Contributing 


1460 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story frame 

commercial 

bldg. 


Henry Sweet 


1885 




Potentially 
Contributing 


1462 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


William Roese 


1890 


Worthmann & 
Neebe 


Contributing 



45 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1464 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 


August 
Dettman 


1881 




Contributing 


1466 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Louis Dierson 


1905 


Worthmann & 
Steinbach / 
(B. Baker) 


Contributing 


1467 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


M. Fitzgerald 


1895 


Frederick R. 
Schock 


Contributing 


1469 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1470 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1471 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1472 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1474 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fronted in 
1913) 


A. C. Louston 


1883 




Contributing 


1478 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story 

limestone store 
& flat bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1480-82 N. Milwaukee 
Ave. 


1 -story 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 1980s 




Non-contributing 


1501 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2- story frame 

commercial 

bldg. 


Henry Leon 


1881 




Potentially 
Contributing 



46 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1507 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story 

commercial & 
residential 
bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1509 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fronted c. 
1920s) 


F. Hagerman 


1884 




Contributing 


151 1 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


C. Kragel 


1888 




Contributing 


1513 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story 

commercial & 
residential 
bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1515 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story 

commercial & 
residential 
bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1514 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story store & 
flat bldg. 


Joseph 
Dercheimer 


1902 


(H. Olgen) 


Contributing 


1516 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1519 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


R. C. Maurer 


1912 


Johan F. 

Knudson / 
(H. Clausen) 


Contributing 


1520 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story terra 
cotta 

commercial 
bldg. (Re- 
fronted in 
1924) 


P. 0. Benson 


1921 


Jens J. Meldahl 


Contributing 


1521 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story glazed 
brick store & 
loft bldg. 


Philip Lesman 


1910 


S. Milton 
Eichberg / 
(Innes & 
Steinseker) 


Contributing 



47 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1524 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


William 
Dickinson 


1891 




Contributing 


1526 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Mrs. A. 
Huelberger 


1888 




Contributing 


1530-32 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


2-story brick 
commercial 
bldg. (2 nd story 
added in 1928) 


Henry Spitz 


c. 1900 


Otto Zippwald 


Contributing 


1525 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1910s 




Contributing 


1529 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story glazed 
brick store & 
loft bldg. 




c. 1910s 




Contributing 


1531-37 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


4- story brick 

residential 

bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1534 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Leon Kuttner 


1886 




Contributing 


1538 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story stone 
commercial 
bldg. 

(Storefront 
from 1925) 




c 1880s 




Contributing 


1539 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 
movie theater 


R. Goldstein 
Bell Theater 


1912 


David Saul 
Klafter 


Contributing 


1540 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story store & 
flat bldg. 




1877 




Contributing 


1542-48 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


4- story store & 
flat bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1543 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


M. Kaplan 


1911 


Maurice Spitzer / 
(P. Jacobs) 


Contributing 



48 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1547-49 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


5-story 

residential 

bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1550 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Fourth 
story added 
1882; re- 
fenestration c. 
1910s) 


J. Erickson 


1881 




Contributing 


1552-54 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


G. R. Benson 


1919 


Christian O. 
Hansen / (Menke 
& Fuhlberg) 


Contributing 


1551 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 


Becky 
Sackleim 


1927 


Leroy & Klein / 
(W. B. Foley) 


Non-contributing 


1553 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2 -story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 


J. B. Scholl 


1907 


William 
Schulze/ 
(Bergman) 


Non-contributing 


1557 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. (Re- 
fronted c. 
1910s) 


Niels Hausen 


1888 




Contributing 


1558 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 
commercial 
bldg. 

(originally 3- 
stories) 




c. 1880s 




Non-contributing 


1559 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


1 -story brick 

commercial 

bldg. 




c. 2000 




Non-contributing 


1560 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c.1880s 




Contributing 


1561 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Ryan Brothers 


1883 




Potentially 
Contributing 



49 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1562-64 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Charles 
Seegers 


1878 




Contributing 


1563 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 

(originally 3 
stories) 


Ryan Brothers 


1886 




Non-contributing 


1565-89 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story terra 
cotta store & 
office bldg. 
(Flatiron 
Bldg.) 


Peter C. 
Brooks 


1913 


Holabird & 
Roche / (J. P. & 
J. W. O'Connor) 


Contributing 


1566 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Non-contributing 


1570-72 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1574-76 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1601 N. Milwaukee Ave. 


3 -story terra 
cotta bank 
building 


Noel State 
Bank 


1919 


Gardner C. 
Coughlen 


Contributing 


1606-08 N.Milwaukee 
Ave. 


12-story office 
building 
(Northwest 
Tower) 


Milnosa 
Building Corp. 


1928 


Perkins, Chatten, 
& Hammond / 
(R. F. Wilson & 
Co.) 


Contributing 


1948 W. North Ave. 


1 -story terra 
cotta store 
building 




c. 1920s 




Contributing 


1950 W. North Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
building 


Patrick F. 
Flynn 


1892 




Contributing 


1954 W. North Ave. 


4- story brick 
store & flat 
building 


Patrick F. 
Flynn 


1889 




Contributing 



50 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1958 W. North Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
building 
(originally 4- 
stories, 
mansard roof 
and attic story 
removed c. 
1990s) 


Patrick F. 
Flynn 


1889 




Contributing 


2007 W. North Ave. 


1 -story brick 
store bldg. 
(originally 3 
stories; 

storefront from 
1924) 


Jonathan 
Schmidt 


1884 




Non-contributing 


2009 W. North Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


2011 W. North Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & flat 
bldg. 


Herman 
Elmhardt 


1891 




Contributing 


2013 W. North Ave. 


3 -story stone 
store & flat 
bldg. 


G. F. Bender 


1889 




Contributing 


2023-25 W. North Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


Charles 
Menzel 


1913 


William Schulze 
/ (Urlake & 
Thielberg) 


Contributing 


2027 W. North Ave. 


2-story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 


John G. 
Heideman 


1912 


William Schulze 
/ (H. Bergeman) 


Contributing 


2029-33 W. North Ave. 


2-story brick 
garage 


August Hinze 


1912 


(Menke & 
Thelberg) 


Contributing 


2035 W. North Ave. 


3 -story brick 
flat bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


2037-41 W. North Ave. 


3 -story terra 
cotta bath 
house (North 
Avenue Baths) 


H. Kaplan 


1921 


A. L. Levy & 
William Klein / 
(Gamm Bros.) 


Contributing 



51 



Address 



Building 
Description 



Original 
Owner 



Original Date of 
Construction 



Architect / 
(Builder) 



Contributing 



1542-56 N. Damen Ave. 


2 -story brick 
store & office 
bldg. 


Otto Schulz 


1912 


(S. N. Nielson) 


Contributing 


1556-58 N. Damen Ave. 


1 -story brick 
station house 


Metropolitan 
West Side 
Elevated 
Railway Co. 


1894 


(Jonathan Clark 
& Sons) 


Contributing 


1560-62 N. Damen Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & loft 
bldg. 




c. 1880s 




Contributing 


1564-72 N. Damen Ave. 


3 -story brick 
store & hall 
bldg. 


Mr. Flynn 


1889 


William 
Ohlhaber 


Contributing 



Milwaukee Avenue Boom Offers Striking Proof That the Loop 

Cannot Longer Bind Hustling Chicago, Subway or No Subway 



Within the Last Ten 
Years the Prize Busi- 
ness Thoroughfare of 
the Northwest Side 
Has Grown Steadily 
in Importance, Until 
It Now Proudly 
Boasts the Second 
Largest Retail Sec* 
tion in Chicago. 




This illustration from March 26, 1911 accompanied a Chicago Tribune article on the booming retail 
activity on Milwaukee Avenue. The Wieboldt's Department Store Building at 1275-1295 N. Milwaukee 
dominates the right side of the drawing. 



52 



Acknowledgments 
city of chicago 

Richard M. Daley, Mayor 

Department of Planning and Development 

Arnold L. Randall, Commissioner 

Brian Goeken, Deputy Commissioner for Landmarks 

Project Staff 

Matt Crawford, research, writing, photography 
Terry Tatum, writing and editing 
Susan Perry, research 
Courtney Gray (intern), research 
Brian Goeken, editing 

Illustrations 

Chicago History Museum, Haymarket Affair Digital Collection: p. 9 (bottom). 

Chicago Tribune, March 26, 191 1 : p. 52. 

Elaine A.Coorens, Wicker Park from 1673 thru 1929: pp. 9 (top), 1 1 (top left and right, lower 

right). 
Department of Planning and Development: pp. 2 (district map), 4, 5, 14, 17, 19, 20, 22, 24, 26, 

28, 30. 
Greater Chicago Magazine. Vol. IV, no. 2, February 1929: pp. 1 1 (lower left), 19 (top left). 
Holland's Milwaukee Avenue Directory : p. 7 (top and lower left). 



COMMISSION ON CHICAGO LANDMARKS 

David Mosena, Chairman 
John W. Baird, Secretary 
Arnold L. Randall 
Lisa Willis 
Phyllis Ellin 
Christopher R. Reed 
Edward I.Torrez 
Ernest C.Wong 
Ben Weese 



The Commission is staffed by the 

Chicago Department of Planning and Development 

33 N. LaSsalle Street, Suite 1600, Chicago, IL 60602 

3 12-744-3200; 744-2958 (TTY) 
http://www.cityofchicago.org/landmarks 

Printed May 2007; Reprinted February 2008